by Fred Espenak, GSFC Planetary Systems Laboratory

Path of the
Annular Solar Eclipse of 2021 Jun 10

Fred Espenak

The following table delineates the path of the Moon's
antumbral
shadow during the
Annular Solar Eclipse of 2021 Jun 10.
The geographic coordinates (WGS 84) of the northern and southern limits and the central line are listed at
120-second intervals.
This provides adequate detail for making plots of the path on larger scale maps.
Local circumstances on the central line include the ratio of the apparent diameters of the Moon to the Sun,
the Sun's altitude and azimuth (degrees),
the path width (kilometers) and the duration on the central line (minutes and seconds).

Links for the
Annular Solar Eclipse of 2021 Jun 10

Eclipse Predictions

Predictions for the
Annular Solar Eclipse of 2021 Jun 10
were generated using the
VSOP87/ELP2000-85
solar and lunar ephemerides and a value of ΔT =
69.7
seconds.

The eclipse predictions presented here DO NOT include the effects of mountains and valleys along the edge of the Moon.
Such corrections for the lunar limb profile may shift the limits
of the eclipse path north or south by ~1-3 kilometers,
and change the eclipse duration by ~1-3 seconds.
More detailed predictions including the effects of the lunar limb profile are normally posted 12-18 months before each eclipse,

Acknowledgments

All eclipse calculations are by Fred Espenak, and he assumes full responsibility for their accuracy.
Permission is freely granted to reproduce
this data when accompanied by an acknowledgment: